Thursday, April 24, 2014

My Takeaways from CUE 2014

This year, I was lucky to attend CUE 2014 with nine other great educators from my district. It was the first time so many of us were able to attend. The conversations over dinner were worth the price of admission alone.

I created a Google doc for Carlsbad attendees to share their notes from the sessions they attended. Keep in mind, this is a work in progress. Most of my fellow attendees are classroom teachers who went back to school the following Monday to face 30+ parent teacher conferences. Now they are dealing with SBAC testing. I'm sure these notes will become clearer over time, but the links/sites/apps mentioned are worth taking a look at.

I personally had a few ah-has myself and, while the list below is seemingly random, I thought I would share anyway...
  •  Everyone seems to be blogging regularly, but me. Why is that? How do they think of the things to share? I have no idea, but intend to use the rest of the year to find out...
  •   (Butte County Ed Tech) shared the word of the day on March 20th in her session - bi-techual. I love it because it totally defines who I am (PC at work, Mac at home, Google everywhere)
  • @levarburton (LeVar Burton - aka the Reading Rainbow guy) gave me two great terms: 
    • Self Selected: teachers have "self selected" to be responsible for preparing future generations to do great things.  We are on the front lines, but only because we actually put ourselves there.
    • Initiating Events: life changing moments come to fruition for years to come.  One of my initiating events was having my oldest son while still in college. I realized I didn't want to become a physical therapist and changed my major to elementary education. Enough said...
  • @Dowbiggin (Diane Main) may just be one of my heroes.  I just love her personality and any professional development she offers will be amazing. Her YouTube channel, especially her parodies, make me wonder where she finds the time...
  • Thinglink is a really cool site that I'd never heard of before, but everyone else seemed to know about it.  It allows you to take an image and embed links to websites - virtual field trips or even interactive student reports are great ideas for this.  It's a lot easier to use than I originally thought.
  • SAMR (Substitution, Augmentation, Modification, Redefinition) for technology integration seems to be everywhere now. It can be a little daunting, but I always encourage others to try to ascend one level at a time. Makes it much more manageable that way.  I wrote two Tech Tidbits articles (issues 5.8 and 5.9) on the subject a few years ago.  It's great to see it truly catching on. Thanks to @dvocicka for his foresight.
  • @sjbrooksyoung (Susan Brooks-Young) - her presentation on happier educators included something I've always taught my student teachers to help them remain organized, only she said it much more succinctly -- just remember the 4 D's:
    • Do it now
    • Defer it (but set an appointment)
    • Delegate
    • Dump/delete
  • Finally - want your students on your district's wi-fi instead of their 3G or 4G?  Remind them that they won't be using their data plan!  You'll get parents on board immediately!!  Thanks to Cheryl Fiello for that priceless tidbit!
So, that was my first attempt at blogging. I'd love your thoughts, but be kind this first time around. I'm sure my blogging skin will thicken over time... 


1 comment:

  1. Good stuff, Sharon. I intend to check out Thinglink and Diane Main's parodies.
    M

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